Unheard Melodies

Apophatic Poetics and Literary Reading

Eric Weiskott

Pages: 304

Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9781531515201
Published: 05 January 2027
$35.00
Available to order on 07 September 2026
(Pre-order)
Hardback
ISBN: 9781531515195
Published: 05 January 2027
$125.00
Available to order on 07 September 2026

Unheard Melodies is an essay in comparative poetics. The book draws together readings of fourteenth- and twenty-first-century poetry, from Chaucer and Langland to Claudia Rankine and Ben Lerner, to reframe literary methodologies. Weiskott works through the tension between lineage and family resemblance, between mounting a literary-historical claim to connect old poetry to new and suspending claims of influence in order to draw out similarities in the practice of poetry writing across disparate times and places. The chapters show how premodern English verse, from Chaucer’s rhyming lyrics to the alliterative verse of the anonymous Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, supplies a forgotten prehistory for contemporary poetic styles.

Pivoting historically around John Keats’s translation of Christian theology into lyric poetry, Unheard Melodies concerns the paradoxical power of literature to represent what literature cannot represent: novels no one can read, lyrics no one can hear, syllables no one can pronounce, experiences no one can have, and more. In reading for these and other “apophatic effects,” Weiskott maps the spectrum of present absences possible in literature and song, including Nabokov’s novels and Bob Dylan’s music. Proposing theological negativity in the Christian tradition as both source and analogue of literary styles, the four parts of the book track apophatic poetics through four critical keywords: lyric, meter, close reading, and career.

Unheard Melodies is a dazzlingly energetic engagement with the things we call literature. This is an enlivening experiment, authorized and sustained by the author’s double commitment to scholarly thoroughness and self-reflexivity.”—Julie Orlemanski, University of Chicago

“This book makes a thrilling experiment: What happens when we read fourteenth-century alliterative verse next to twenty-first-century lyric poetry? Weiskott is a friendly, witty, and immensely knowledgeable guide, and this adventurous swerve across periods and specialties brings out imaginative affiliations between poets as disparate as Chaucer and Rankine.”—Walt Hunter, Case Western Reserve University

Eric Weiskott is Professor of English at Boston College. He is the author of Cycle of Dreams (Punctum, 2024), Meter and Modernity in English Verse, 1350–1650 (Penn, 2021) and English Alliterative Verse: Poetic Tradition and Literary History (Cambridge, 2016; pbk, 2019; winner, English Association Beatrice White Prize, 2018) and editor of an annotated edition of the A-text of William Langland’s Piers Plowman (Exeter, 2025).